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Writing for APS Journals APS Workshop, Charlotte, NC Niklaus J. Grünwald, Editor-in-Chief, Phytopathology 2009-2011 Anthony P. Keinath, Editor-in-Chief, Plant Disease 2007-2009 & Pub Board Chair 2010-2013 Today’s Outline APS journals Impact factor How to write a good paper Issues Submission and Review Scientific writing Tips for Authors Short Break Which journal? Responsibilities (EICs, SEs, AE, ad hoc reviewers) Manuscript Central Initial submission Revisions Publication Ethics Tips for reviewers What makes a good review? Questions (ask anytime) The APS Journals Three print /online journals Phytopathology (1910) Plant Disease (1980) Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions (1988) Online only: Plant Health Progress (2000) Plant Health Instructor (2000) Plant Disease Management Reports (1945, 2007) Oversight rests with APS Publications Board A Brief History of APS Journals 1910 Phytopathology 1917 Plant Disease Reporter first published by USDA, U.S. Division of Mycology and Disease Survey 1967,1975 APS Special Committees recommend a second APS journal 1979 Plant Disease Reporter is discontinued by USDA, ARS due to budget cuts 1980 Plant Disease: second APS journal 1997 MPMI: third APS journal Phytopathology For 100 years, the premier international journal for publication of articles on fundamental research that advances understanding of the nature of plant diseases, the agents that cause them, their spread, the losses they cause, and measures that can be used to control them Reviews Symposium proceedings Letters to the editor Plant Disease Leading international journal for rapid reporting of research on new diseases, epidemics, and methods of disease control Covers basic and applied research, which focuses on practical aspects of disease diagnosis and treatment Monthly Feature Articles summarize current information on specific diseases The popular Disease Notes: Brief and timely reports of new diseases, new disease outbreaks, new hosts, and pertinent new observations of plant diseases and pathogens worldwide MPMI Original research on the molecular biology and molecular genetics of pathological, symbiotic, and associative interactions of microbes with plants and insects with plants Published in collaboration with IS-MPMI Fundamental and advanced applied research Short reviews of rapidly developing areas of the molecular aspects of plant-microbe interactions How do APS Journals Differ? 2009 Impact Factors Average number of times that an article published in the journal in the previous 2 years was cited i.e. citations in 2009 of articles published in 2007 and 2008 = IF in 2009 Ratio of citations/number articles published MPMI 4.4 Molecular Plant Pathology 3.5 European Journal of Plant Pathology 1.9 Plant Pathology 2.4 Phytopathology 2.2 Plant Disease 2.1 Strategies to increase IF Review articles Mini series PubMed listing Online access: 12 or 24 months Online preprint The Invaluable APS Journals Staff Karen Cummings, Director of Publications, Editorial and Production Ina Pfefer, Journals Records Coordinator Kristen Barlage, Technical Editor, Phytopathology Diana Roeder, Technical Editor, Plant Disease Jan Kuhn, Technical Editor, Disease Notes Kris Wilbur, Technical Editor, MPMI Patti Ek, Production Supervisor Greg Grahek, Director of Marketing/Subscriptions Steve Kronmiller, Director of Web Production Scientific Writing How to write a good paper Content Structure Journal selection Issues Rejection Authorship Ethics Dual submission Plagiarism Thoughts on Publishing Last step in scientific process Not publishing = failure Purpose: What did you discover? What is new information? What does it mean to your colleagues? Implications? Why should I care? Why? How? What? Why did you do this work? How did you do it? Why should I waste time reading your work? Why did you invest your time and effort? Show important details Remove useless detail What did you find? What’s new? Relate your work to previous knowledge Implications? Why? How? What? Why did you do this work? INTRODUCTION How did you do it? M&M Why should I waste time reading your work? Why did you invest your time and effort? Show important details Remove extraneous detail; clear and to the point What did you find? RESULTS & DISCUSSION What’s new? Relate your work to previous knowledge Implications? Title Short, informative Avoid vague titles Most people just read the title “Characterization of resistance in rice” Communicate main finding “Identification of a major QTL for rice blast resistance in rice” Abstract Write last Use key sentences from text Copy & Paste Organize into coherent summary Successful Writing Integrate writing with research Write as you go Prepare outline while doing experiments Write M&M after setting up experiments Read as you go and fill in introduction Keep a record of things you read that are relevant to your work Write every day! Read every day! Format, Figures and Tables Read Author Guidelines for each journal Follow EXACT wording Format to fit journal Ask a colleague for a sample Look at current issue of journal Make it easy on yourself: Peer reviewers do not like poorly formatted manuscripts, figures, tables References = Trouble Check alphabetization Author surnames, then years (if necessary) Ling, 2009 Ling, Keinath, Wechter, 2007 Ling, Wechter, Keinath, 2000 Ling, Wechter, Keinath, 2005 Are all references cited? Are all cited references listed? High Quality Figures Be sure resolution of figures is high 675, 1,350, or 2,100 pixels wide for 1-, 2-, or 3column width figures in Plant Disease 1,260 and 2,610 pixels in width for 1- and 2column width figures in Phytopathology Excel or PowerPoint not recommended for graphs Use Adobe Illustrator to add labels to gel photos For final version, need separate figure files in approved file format! Results Describe what is in figures and tables; nothing else Include background Results of statistical analysis Do not put results into perspective Just state facts Plagiarize Yourself It is okay to use your own writing as a template for new writing Be pragmatic Do not cut and paste from anybody else’s work! Style Results in simple past tense Published knowledge in present tense “We evaluated the response of cultivar X to disease Y.” “The human genome contains ten copies of gene X.” Avoid passive voice like the plague “It was not expected that the human genome contain ten copies of gene x.” vs. “We did not expect that this genome contain 10 copies of gene x.” Break The Neglected PreSubmission Review Have your manuscript reviewed by 2 colleagues-who are not authors--before you submit it A policy in many departments and in USDA, ARS A “fresh look” is invaluable Have you explained M&M and Results well enough? Grammar checking Poor grammar gives a very bad impression Use word-processing grammar checks! Have a native English speaker review the paper Technical editors have the “final say” Phytopathology or Plant Disease? Phytopathology “Fundamental research that advances understanding of plant diseases and the agents that cause them” Topics: Plant Disease “Basic and applied research that focuses on practical aspects of disease diagnosis and treatment” Topics: biological control; theoretical aspects of disease epidemiology; disease diagnosis (including molecular methods), etiology, applied epidemiology, disease management genetics and biology of pathogens and pathogen populations; disease resistance breeding food safety fungicide resistance Phytopathology or Plant Disease? Matter of degree and opinion Some manuscripts can be published in either journal Both are great journals Suggestions Submit to PD if work is applied or concerns only the specific host-pathogen system studied Ask EICs for appropriateness before submission Phytopathology/MPMI Editorial Boards Editor-in-Chief Senior Editors Associate Editors Ad hoc Reviewers Plant Disease Editorial Board Editor-in-Chief Notes Assigning Editor Associate Editors Senior Editors Features Editor Ad hoc Reviewers What Does the EIC Do? Choose and train senior editors (SE) Assign manuscripts to senior editors Assist SE with difficult decisions Choose editor’s picks (monthly) Hear appeals from authors Choose new associate editors (yearly) Revise Instructions to Authors (yearly) Prepare semi/annual reports Serve on Publications Board Editors Senior Editors Associate Editors Choose reviewers Review manuscripts Read (and edit) manuscript Make decision on acceptance Make recommendation to accept, revise, or reject Check revised manuscripts Agree to review on a regular basis Hear initial appeal about rejected manuscripts Attend yearly editorial board meeting (at APS meeting) Reviewers Ad hoc reviewers Serve upon invitation by SE Provide expert opinion on acceptability for journal Recommend improvements We need more reviewers Volunteer by writing your EICs/SEs Manuscript Central See May 2007 Phytopathology News article for tips for authors (http://apsnet.org/members/phyto/ 2007/05/070501.pdf) Allows EIC to check details easily Reduces paperwork and mailing time Database of reviewers and their performance How can the peer review process be improved? “Acquire more qualified reviewers. Some of them suck. I’ve had two completely opposite reviews… one indicates that the paper is the best thing since sliced bread, and the second (the one who sucks) rejects the paper.” From the 2006 PD reader survey The Review Process How Long Will It Take to Get My Paper Reviewed? Statistic Research Median 54 Mean 57 Range 2 - 177 Original Revised Features Notes Research Features Notes 48 37 7 14 7 79 41 16 16 11 28 - 162 4 - 165 <1 - 111 2 - 26 <1 - 150 Data from 2008 Plant Disease Aug. 2009 to Aug. 2010 Update: Mean of 36 days from submission to initial decision and Mean of 58 days from submission to final decision across all manuscript types. Acceptance “Accept with Revision” or “Reject and Revise” Authors revise manuscript (3 months) SE evaluates manuscript and makes decision Repeat above two steps if necessary Manuscript accepted for publication Authors revise and resubmit manuscript Manuscript assigned to previous SE or another SE SE have access to previous version of manuscript, decision letter, and reviews Review process continues normal track “2 strikes policy” Revising Your Manuscript Don’t take comments personally! Consider ALL suggestions Take comments by SE very seriously! For reviewers’ comments: Does the suggestion improve clarity? Contact SE if you need help assessing comments In Manuscript Central Do NOT submit a revision as a new manuscript! Look for the “Manuscripts Awaiting Revision” link or How Long Will It Take to Get My Paper Published? 90 days after acceptance to print is goal Generally will appear in the issue published 4-5 months after the month of acceptance Manuscripts assigned to issue after galley proofs returned How can the peer review process be improved? “Try to remind reviewers that peer review comments should be positive criticism. Too often I see mean-spirited, negative reviews made by people hiding behind the anonymity of the peer-review process.” From the 2006 PD reader survey Dealing with Rejection Rejection is okay Perhaps another journal is more appropriate Rejection can be challenged First, calm down! Contact Senior Editor Only contact EIC after discussion with SE Take reviewer comments VERY seriously and address them with logical, scientific arguments Publication Ethics Manuscripts submitted to APS journal have not been: Submitted at the same time to another journal Published already in another journal or online Penalty is rejection without resubmission Results reported are original work and accurate Data are representative of what happened, i.e. not selective Data were collected from actual experiments, i.e. not “made up” APS Publication Ethics Policy Plagiarism Two main types of plagiarism: Not including citations for work reported by other scientists Copying text “word-for-word” without a citation If you use three words in a row from another published source, must “quote” it Manuscripts with plagiarism will be rejected. Resubmission may be allowed (after corrections!) APS Publication Ethics Policy Authorship Who qualifies as an author on a manuscript? Each author should have made a substantial intellectual contribution to the design, conduct, analysis, or interpretation of the study Each author must approve the article before it is submitted for review APS Publication Ethics Policy Ethics for Reviewers Reviewers may not: Cite or refer to the work prior to publication Use information from the work to advance their research Share the manuscript or its findings with others Save a copy of any portion of the manuscript following completion of the review APS Publication Ethics Policy Potential Conflicts of Interest Reviewer doing the same research SE/reviewer at same institution/location as author Pre-submission reviewer reviewing manuscript as peer reviewer EIC submitting manuscript to the journal EIC picking strict /easy SE based on manuscript content /quality Variation among SE in what is acceptable for publication What Is a Good Review? Does the MS present “significant new information relevant to the scope of the journal”? Do the Results and Discussion match the data in tables and figures? Are the interpretations and conclusions logical? Can the organization be improved? What are the main strengths and weaknesses of the manuscript? Tips for Reviewers Be critical But: Be supportive Include suggestions for improvement “Review for others as you would have others review for you” (McPeek et al., 2009) APS journals need reviewers It is every author’s responsibility to serve as an anonymous peer-reviewer! Serve as Reviewer or Editor Talk to EIC or SEs Let current SEs know you are interested in reviewing papers Create a user account in Manuscript Central that shows your areas of expertise Need separate account for each journal Questions? Contact info: [email protected], Phytopathology [email protected], Plant Disease [email protected], MPMI [email protected], APS Pub Board Resources Browse the web to find many more valuable resources. Below is a short list of references used, but many equally good references can be found on the web. ‘Guidelines for writing a scientific paper’, http://www.sci.sdsu.edu/~smaloy/MicrobialGenetics/topics/scientific-writing.pdf ‘How to write a scientific paper in scientific journal style and format’, http://abacus.bates.edu/~ganderso/biology/resources/writing/HTWtoc.html ‘Dont perish: A step-by-step approach to writing and publishing a scientific paper’, http://web.mac.com/sophien/KamounLab/suppfiles/DontPerish.swf ‘Authorshipo issues: Let’s talk about it!’, http://web.mac.com/sophien/KamounLab/suppfiles/authorship_talk.swf ‘A Guide to Writing in the Biological Sciences’, http://classweb.gmu.edu/biologyresources/writingguide/ScientificPaper.htm